Symptoms of constipation in children

If your child is already potty trained, soiled pants can be another sign of constipation, as runny poo (diarrhoea) may leak out around the hard, constipated poo. This is called overflow soiling.

If your child is constipated, they may find it painful to poo. This can create a vicious circle: the more it hurts, the more they hold back. The more constipated they get, the more it hurts, and so on.

Even if pooing isn’t painful, once your child is really constipated, they may stop wanting to go to the toilet altogether.

How to treat your child’s constipation

If you think your child may be constipated, take them to the GP. The treatment for constipation depends on your child’s age.

The longer your child is constipated, the more difficult it can be for them to get back to normal, so make sure you get help early.

Laxatives are often recommended for children who are eating solid foods, alongside diet and lifestyle changes.

It may take several months for the treatments to work, but keep trying until they do. Remember that laxative treatment may make your child’s overflow soiling worse before it gets better.

Once your child’s constipation has been dealt with, it’s important to stop it coming back. Your GP may advise that your child keeps taking laxatives for a while to make sure their poo stays soft enough to push out regularly.

Try to stay calm

Getting constipated and soiling their clothes isn’t something your child is doing on purpose, so there’s no reason to get cross with them.

You may both find the situation stressful, but staying calm and relaxed is the best attitude to help your child deal with the problem.

How to prevent constipation

Make sure your child has plenty to drink – offer breastfed babies who aren’t eating solids yet plenty of breastfeeds. Formula-fed babies can have extra drinks of water between their formula feeds. See more advice on drinks for babies and toddlers.

Give your child a variety of foods, including plenty of fruit and vegetables, which are a good source of fibre. See what to feed young children.

Get your child into a routine of regularly sitting on the potty or toilet, after meals or before bed, and praise them whether or not they poo. This is particularly important for potty-trained boys, who may forget about pooing once they are weeing standing up.

Make sure your child can rest their feet flat on the floor or a step when they’re using the potty or toilet, to get them in a good position for pooing. ERIC, The Children’s Bowel & Bladder Charity’s leaflet, Children’s Bowel Problems (PDF, 2.48Mb) shows this position.

Ask if they feel worried about using the potty or toilet – some children don’t want to poo in certain situations, such as at nursery or school.

Stay calm and reassuring, so that your child doesn’t see going to the toilet as a stressful situation – you want your child to see pooing as a normal part of life, not something to be ashamed of.

If you’d like advice about taking the stress out of going to the toilet for your child, speak to your health visitor.

More information and support

Contact the ERIC helpline on 0845 370 8008, Monday to Thursday 10am to 2pm, or email a question to [email protected].

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